Jump to content
  • Member Statistics

    17,919
    Total Members
    7,904
    Most Online
    simbasad2
    Newest Member
    simbasad2
    Joined

Lake Effect Snow Belts Discussion Thread


TugHillMatt

Recommended Posts

  • Replies 547
  • Created
  • Last Reply
  On 11/18/2014 at 3:10 AM, Jonger1150 said:

I have been watching that band... It must be CRANKING there.

Yes dropped in inch in about 30 Mins so far, probably get 2 inches out of this band alone, looks to settle down, but more bands are aligning off the lake.

 

There does appear to be a meso low in Superior north of Newberry, could drop some serious totals when then comes on shore.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  On 11/18/2014 at 1:58 AM, Harry Perry said:

Most of the snow staying west of 131 along the I-94 corridor.

Looks like Harry and I may miss out on most of the "rippage".

 

 

Starting to look that way. Needed a wnw flow and this is west to wsw and with the moisture not as robust as models etc suggested it is not helping either. Always something with LES. Models are useless..

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  On 11/18/2014 at 3:28 AM, Jonger1150 said:

#1 Keweenaw

#2 About 15 miles inland from Grand Marais

#3 Bo's location

#4 Ontanagon

#5 Gaylord-Kalkaska

#6 Allegan, MI

 

This is a Michigan only list.

 

1. Keweenaw/Calumet

2. Munising

3. Mancelona

4. Gaylord

5. Kalkaska

6. Maple City/Leelanau County

Link to comment
Share on other sites

By personal experience, the greatest totals I ever witnessed were last winter near Grand Marais.... I also like the remoteness of the area, it's far less traveled than the Keweenaw.

 

Munising is a good town, but they seem to fall behind Grand Marais based on experience. Livability, Munising owns Grand Marais though.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  On 11/18/2014 at 3:32 AM, dmc76 said:

1. Keweenaw/Calumet

2. Munising

3. Mancelona

4. Gaylord

5. Kalkaska

6. Maple City/Leelanau County

 

I like this list. I love Munising. Non-Michigan would be the Tug Hill, without a doubt. That's a good question: Which New York town? I think I'd go with Pulaski or Fulton. Redfield isn't really a town.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  On 11/18/2014 at 3:32 AM, dmc76 said:

1. Keweenaw/Calumet

2. Munising

3. Mancelona

4. Gaylord

5. Kalkaska

6. Maple City/Leelanau County

I wanted 200+" snow... choices were

Munising/ along the coast all the way to near Paradise

Keeweenaw

Ontanagon

Huron's

Obv, I chose the Huron's, my second choice would have been the porky's in Ontanagon.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  On 11/18/2014 at 3:32 AM, dmc76 said:

1. Keweenaw/Calumet

2. Munising

3. Mancelona

4. Gaylord

5. Kalkaska

6. Maple City/Leelanau County

In Michigan:

1:) Keweenaw

2.) Huron Moutnains (Around Bo)

3) Grand Marias

4)Gaylord (Hey already live here : :snowing:

 

Western New Your (Most Preferred just to see a 3-4' storm once)

1:) Oswego (Tug Hill Area)

2:) South of Buffalo

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  On 11/18/2014 at 3:05 AM, BuffaloWeather said:

Hope you get some thundersnow. Nothing beats it!

Thanks! I experienced it during the Blizzard of 1993 at my home in Lancaster, PA. I probably did a "Jim Cantore" move... lol

 

  On 11/18/2014 at 3:13 AM, Jonger1150 said:

Models have good banding making it all the way to me.... Supposed to make it out this way after 2am.

 

I hope you get it! Did you guys get some today? How much is on the ground there?

 

  On 11/18/2014 at 3:45 AM, Jonger1150 said:

The Tug is the king of LES, but its a bit warmer and more prone to melts. That's a knock... But its definitely the king of LES.

This is the same thing I have thought about. The U.P. gets many less "Warm" Low Pressure systems. I haven't looked at any climo maps, but my guess is that the U.P. is probably 10 degrees colder, if not more, than the Tughill. I'd probably get my wife to live int he Tug before the U.P. though. It's closer to our families in PA and isn't as "close to the North Pole" as she would say. haha

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  On 11/18/2014 at 4:09 AM, blackrock said:

Thanks! I experienced it during the Blizzard of 1993 at my home in Lancaster, PA. I probably did a "Jim Cantore" move... lol

I hope you get it! Did you guys get some today? How much is on the ground there?

This is the same thing I have thought about. The U.P. gets many less "Warm" Low Pressure systems. I haven't looked at any climo maps, but my guess is that the U.P. is probably 10 degrees colder, if not more, than the Tughill. I'd probably get my wife to live int he Tug before the U.P. though. It's closer to our families in PA and isn't as "close to the North Pole" as she would say. haha

Jan 2014 was 10F degrees colder in Marquette than Watertown.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Since LES is the big topic tonight and everyone has discussed the best places on the US side for snow. What areas in Ontario get the best LES? I would imagine downwind of Lake Huron holds the best spot somewhere.

 

4km NAM snowfall in the next 48 hours.

 

nam4km_asnow_neus_17.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  On 11/18/2014 at 4:15 AM, Geos said:

Since LES is the big topic tonight and everyone has discussed the best places on the US side for snow. What areas in Ontario get the best LES? I would imagine downwind of Lake Huron holds the best spot somewhere.

 

4km NAM snowfall in the next 48 hours.

 

 

Lots of good places since we're surrounded by lakes, so very dependent on wind direction. Here's a TV graphic from tonight showing one of the hotspots for tonight's WSW winds.

 

B2sVjT0CEAAhmIV.png

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  On 11/18/2014 at 4:15 AM, Geos said:

Since LES is the big topic tonight and everyone has discussed the best places on the US side for snow. What areas in Ontario get the best LES? I would imagine downwind of Lake Huron holds the best spot somewhere.

 

I lived in the Muskoka region of Ontario for two years, and they got some pretty nice lake effect snow bands off of Georgian Bay there. It is also very cold there, so the snow cover pretty much lasts the whole winter.London, Collingwood, Barrie, Bracebridge, and Huntsville all do well. I lived between Bracebridge and Huntsville. They also get nice uplift because they're a higher elevation and also have Algonquin Park (higher hills) for orographic lift.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.

×
×
  • Create New...